Xecast Episode 4: A Psychic Whiplash Week
Published on , 357 words, 2 minutes to read
Xe reflects on a week of intense ups and downs, navigating a whirlwind of job offers, contract work, and personal projects.
These show notes were generated using Google Gemini 1.5 Pro. Should this podcast take off, we'll find a better way to do this.
This episode of Xecast finds Xe Iaso reflecting on a week of intense ups and downs, navigating a whirlwind of job offers, contract work, and personal projects.
Show Notes
- Psychic Whiplash: Xe opens up about the rollercoaster of emotions experienced after being laid off and then quickly receiving multiple job offers and contract opportunities. They touch on the feeling of being overwhelmed by the sudden shift in their professional life.
- Introducing Mimi, the AI Discord Bot: Xe delves into their latest creation - Mimi, an AI Discord bot that resides in the Patreon Discord server. Mimi, powered by AI models and tools like Flux Dev, can generate responses, draw images, and even execute Python code.
- Exploring AI Ethics and Safety: Xe discusses their use of Mimi to research the interactions between people and AI chatbots, highlighting the challenges of implementing safety measures like the LlamaGuard filter model. They share interesting anecdotes about Mimi's sometimes unpredictable responses and the difficulty in preventing false positives.
- The Future of AI and Content Creation: Xe touches on their skepticism about synthetic data's role in training AI models, expressing concerns about its potential impact on creative fields and the need for human-generated content.
- A New Content Direction: Mid-Form Videos: Xe announces their intention to explore a new content format - mid-form videos focusing on Kubernetes concepts in a home lab setting. They plan to create a series covering specific concepts and their practical applications, aiming for a lower-commitment, higher-volume approach.
- Long-Term Employees and Cloud Adoption: Xe examines the resistance to cloud adoption often encountered from long-term employees with traditional system administrator backgrounds. They offer strategies for managing this resistance and discuss the unique vs. standard paradigm paradox they experienced while transitioning their own workloads to Kubernetes.
This one took slightly longer than usual due to plans for having a guest on fell through. I will be more vigilant and prerecord stuff for next time. Sorry!
Facts and circumstances may have changed since publication. Please contact me before jumping to conclusions if something seems wrong or unclear.
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